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US Secretary of State John Kerry will meet Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in London on Wednesday, a Palestinian official said, weeks after Middle East peace talks collapsed.

“The meeting will discuss a possible resumption of negotiations with Israel,” the official told AFP, requesting anonymity.

US Secretary of State Jen Psaki later confirmed the meeting, but denied they would be used to discuss a resumption of talks.

“While the door remains open to a peace process, the purpose of the meeting is to discuss our ongoing relationship with the Palestinians,” she said.

Kerry’s peace efforts derailed even ahead of their April 29 deadline, with Palestinian and Israeli leaders exchanging recriminations and reneging on commitments made during nine months of fruitless meetings.

“The meeting could be the last attempt by Kerry to revive negotiations,” the Palestinian official said.

Should the peace talks resume, Kerry believes both sides must work on the future contours of a Palestinian state and security arrangements for Israel alongside other core issues such as refugees and Jerusalem.

Israeli security took precedence throughout much of the last talks, overshadowing the issues of future borders and refugees.

During the talks, the Jewish state also announced thousands of new settler homes in the West Bank, on land the Palestinians want for a future state.

In late March, Israel backtracked on a pledge made at the start of talks in July 2013 to release a final batch of veteran Palestinian prisoners, after failing to win a commitment from Abbas to continue the talks, prompting Abbas to seek membership of several international treaties, breaking his own commitments.

The Palestine Liberation Organization, which is dominated by Abbas’s Fatah party, then signed a surprise reconciliation agreement with Islamist rivals Hamas on April 23, after which an incensed Israel pulled out of the talks. Hamas is committed to destroying Israel.